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Universals & Particulars. Stathis Psillos. Universals & Particulars. What are particulars? What are universals? Do we need them both? 3a. If not, are all things particulars or are all things universals? 3aa. Can there be a mixture of both views?. Why posit properties? (I).
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Universals & Particulars Stathis Psillos
Universals & Particulars • What are particulars? • What are universals? • Do we need them both? 3a. If not, are all things particulars or are all things universals? 3aa. Can there be a mixture of both views?
Why posit properties? (I) • Why not go straight for predicates which apply or don’t apply to particulars? (metaphysics = semantics / epistemology ) • Not all predicates characterize properties (the problem of instantiation) • Quine: (i) Properties & metaphysics (ii) Properties & semantics (meaning/intensions)
Why posit properties? (II) • Russell • Dualism • Against resemblance nominalism • Universals subsist (they don’t exist in time) • Acquaintance with universals Wisdom is a virtue. All x (wise) are x (virtuous).
Why posit properties? (III) • Platitudes about properties: • particular: an instantiation of the property F • different particulars can have the same properties • a particular can have many properties • Identity conditions: F ≡ G. 1.one universal can be wholly present at two different places at the same time 2. two (or more) universals can occupy the same place at the same time Laws of thinghood
Nominalism & Realism • Extreme Nominalism • Class Nominalism • Natural Class Nominalism • Resemblance Nominalism
Extreme Nominalism • There are no properties (only particulars). Predicates apply to particulars, but they are just words which group together certain particulars. The things to which a predicate applies have nothing more in common except the fact that this predicate applies to them. • Negative Argument: predication doesn’t require the existence of properties; predicates are not proper names • Quine: ontic commitment doesn’t come with naming • Positive Argument: conceptual economy; empiricism • Chief Objections: • semantics of predication • Explanatory inadequacy – what all these things share in common in virtue of which the predicate applies? • Causation & laws FOR
Classes aren’t universals – they are not repeatables. Class Nominalism • Properties are classes of particulars. Properties apply to particulars of the same class. Application is the class-membership relation. No further issue of why a certain particular belongs to a certain class. Objectivist Position • Negative Argument: • predication requires an extension of the predicate, but this is just a class • no semantic need to commit to universals • Positive Argument: • clear identity conditions of properties capture of platitudes about properties • different particulars same property • same particular different properties • transparent predication (class membership) • Chief Objections: • 1. more classes than properties • 2. same extension different properties • 3. unexplained class membership • 4. change of extension change of property? • 5. meanings of predicates cannot be acquired by acquiring access to the extension of a predicate, i.e. to a class (QUINTON) • 5a. How do we identify further members of a given class? How do we reapply to predicate? • 6. causation & laws (why does it matter to the causal powers of a particular that it belongs to a certain class – i.e. why that there are other members of the class relevant to x’s causal powers?) FOR
Natural Class Nominalism • Properties are natural classes of particulars (not independently existing as universals). Natural class – based on some notion of resemblance identifiable a posteriori. • not a sharp distinction between naturalness and unnaturalness • admits of degrees • joint product of man & nature. • Negative Argument: • predication doesn’t need universals and their awareness – just a natural class of its extension • Positive Argument: • too many classes to which a particular belongs – but not equally many properties that a particular has. So some distinction is needed (natural classes) • Explanation of why a certain predicate has a certain extension/identification of its extension/reapplication of the predicate. “the existence of natural classes is a necessary precondition of our ability to think and speak about the world” (QUINTON, p. 263) • a role in induction, projectability, etc. and causation • Chief Objections: • Isn’t naturalness a property? • Reply: perhaps a super-natural class: the class of all natural classes FOR
Resemblance Nominalism • Properties are classes of resembling particulars. • Resemblance is not an additional fact over particulars a and b and their particularized natures. • Negative Argument: as in class nominalism • Positive Argument: • exemplars and relations of resemblance to them (resemblance test), since resemblance admits of degrees, there needn’t be exactly the same universal shared by all members of the class • resemblance need not be strict / not exact resemblance • exact resemblance as an equivalence relation / equivalence classes: it behaves like a universal without being one • Chief Objections: • 1. Russell’s – one universal (similarity), but is it compelling? A nominalist may go for a regress. But it seems that a realist is also committed to a regress: (cl. instantiation) • 2. resemblance is partial identity – so there is something in common (a property) • 3. resemblance comes in degrees and respects: but what are they? • 4. axioms of resemblance (explained by partial or exact identity) • 5. resemblance is an internal relation. So what is it in the nature of particulars that dictates / determines resemblances to other? BUT: particularized natures • 6. causation
Armstrong • What individuates sets? • Why all the members of a given set are members of the given set? • we need commonality of properties to account for this. • Too many sets – too few properties • The natural class reaction leaves basic notion unanalyzed • Realism (I): At least some properties are intrinsic to objects, but natural classes – classes objects belong to (in terms of the extension of the class) are extrinsic. • Realism (II): properties explain resemblances & the formal properties of resemblance • Realism (III): explains role of properties in causation & laws. • Realism (IV): against uninstantiated properties– a posteriori identification of natural properties
Mellor • Properties • exist independently of how we conceive of them. Properties give meanings to predicates • non semantic reason for believing in the existence of properties • roles in causation and laws • Ramsey-sentences (properties as constituents of laws)